Microsoft takes legal action against infostealer Lumma
22 Mai 2025 - 8:18AM
Cointelegraph


Tech giant Microsoft says it has taken legal action against the
information-stealing malware Lumma Stealer and has blocked
thousands of websites related to the software.
Microsoft said in a May 21 blog post that a federal court in Georgia allowed the
firm’s digital crimes unit to take down, block or suspend nearly
2,300 websites critical to Lumma’s operations, and it has
collaborated with local and international law enforcement agencies
to dismantle the project’s infrastructure.
The company said the US Department of Justice seized Lumma’s
central command structure and disrupted marketplaces where the tool
was sold to other cybercriminals.
Microsoft says that Lumma has been sold via underground forums
since 2022 and that it has undergone multiple upgrades since its
launch.
Domains
seized by Microsoft. Source:
Microsoft Blog
Europol’s European Cybercrime Center and Japan’s Cybercrime
Control Center also facilitated the suspension of locally based
Lumma infrastructure.
Lumma is a malware tool that allows malicious actors to steal
everything from passwords, credit card information, bank account
details, and crypto wallet information.
Between March 16 and May 16, Microsoft said it identified over
394,000 Windows computers infected by the Lumma malware and worked
with law enforcement agencies and cybersecurity firms to sever
communications between the tool and the infected devices.
Malicious activity on the rise
Crypto drainers are software designed to steal the
contents of crypto wallets and are common on phishing sites,
malicious extensions, fake airdrops and more.
Earlier this week, Chinese printer manufacturer Procolored
had reportedly distributed Bitcoin-stealing
malware alongside its official drivers, resulting in the loss of
around $953,000 worth of crypto.
Related: Beware of ‘cracked’ TradingView — it’s a
crypto-stealing trojan
Last month, an AMLBot report said that crypto drainers are now being sold as a SaaS
product, allowing unsophisticated bad actors to rent the service
for as little as $100.
A Feb. 7 report from blockchain analytics firm
Chainalysis said that almost $51 billion worth of crypto was lost
in 2024 due to fraudulent activity and that professional crime
networks, fraud cartels, nation-state-sponsored hackers and
AI-powered scams have taken center stage.
The FBI’s cyber arm reported that Americans lost around $9.3 billion
in 2024 through crypto scams and frauds. The most vulnerable age
group was above the age of 60.
Meanwhile, North Korean hackers have stolen nearly $3 billion
worth of cryptocurrencies between 2017 and 2023, which crypto firm
Paradigm said have become more sophisticated over the years.
Magazine: TradFi is building Ethereum L2s to
tokenize trillions in RWAs
...
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Microsoft takes legal action against infostealer
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